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ACT Math Formulas Flashcards

Math formulas for problems found on the SAT and ACT. While the SAT lists many of the formulas at the beginning of each math test, the ACT does not. And, you will save time if you memorize these.

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698868785Quadratic Formula-b±[√b²-4ac]/2a
698868786Slope(y₂-y₁)/(x₂-x₁)
698868787Slope-Intercepty=mx+b
698868788a³-b³(a-b)(a²+ab+b²)
698868789a³+b³(a+b)(a²-ab+b²)
698868790a²-b²(a-b)(a+b)
698868791a²-2ab+b²(a-b)²
698868792a²+2ab+b²(a+b)²
698868793(a+b)(c+d)ac+ad+bc+bd
698868794a(b+c)ab+ac
698868795sine ratioopposite ÷ hypotenuse
698868796cosine ratioadjacent ÷ hypotenuse
698868797tangent ratioopposite ÷ adjacent
698868798A function is ___________ a relationalways
698868799Direct Variationy=kx
698868800Inverse Variationy=k/x
698868801Slope intercept formy=mx+b
698868802Point-Slope formy-y₁=m(x-x₁)
698868803Standard formAx + By=C, where A, B, and C are not decimals or fractions, where A and B are not both zero, and where A is not a negative
698868804UndefinedWhen there is a vertical line that has different y points, but the same x point
698868805ZeroWhen there is a horizontal line that has different x points, but the same y point
698868806Dividing by a negative number in an inequalityYou must flip the sign
698868807Graphing < or > on a coordinate planedotted line
698868808Graphing ≥ or ≤ on a coordinate planesolid line
698868811Graphing ≥ or > on a coordinate planeshade upwards or to the right
698868813Graphing ≤ or < on a coordinate planeshade downwards or to the left
698868814Infinitely many solutionswhen the system of equations have the same slope and y-intercept
698868815One solutionwhen the system of equations have different slopes
698868817No solutionwhen the system of equations have the same slope but different y-intercepts
698868819All direct variations are ____________________linear functions
698868821A linear function is a function that _____________ a linegraphs
698868823A parent function is the simplest ____________ of a functionequation
698868825Linear parent functiony=x or f(x)=x
698868827Elimination methodsolving systems by adding or subtracting equations to eliminate a variable
698868830Solution of the system of linear equationsAny ordered pair in a system that makes all the equations true
698868832Graphing methodGraphing the system of equations and finding the point at which they intersect
698868834Substitution methodReplacing one variable with an equivalent expression containing the other variable
698868837Absolute value equationA V-shaped graph that points upward of downward
698868839TranslationA shift of a graph horizontally, vertically, or both, which results in a graph of the same shape and size, but in a different position.
698868841Area of a circleΠr²
698868843Area of a squares², where s = length of a side
698868845Area of a triangle½(base x height) [or (base x height)÷2]
698868847Area of a trapezoid½(b₁ +b₂) x h [or (b₁ +b₂) x h÷2]
698868849Perimeter of a rectangle2Length + 2width [or (length + width) x 2]
698868851Perimeter of a square4s (where s = length of a side)
698868852Perimeter (circumference) of a circle2 pi r
698868853Area of rectangle, square, parallelogramA=bh
698868854Circumference of a circle∏d OR 2∏r
698868855Area of a sectorx°/360 times (∏r²), where x is the degrees in the angle
698868856length of a sectorx°/360 times (2 pi r), where x is the degrees in the angle
698868857CircleIs the set of points which are all the same distance (its radius) from a certian point( the center).
698868858Radius (Radii)A segment connecting the center of a circle to any point on the circle
698868859DiameterThe distance across the circle through the center of the circle.The diameter is twice the radius.
698868860ChordThe distance from one point on the circle to another point on the circle.
698868861SectorThe part of a circle that looks like a piece of pie. A sector is bounded by 2 radii and an arc of the circle.
698868862ArcPart of a circle connecting two points on the circle.
698868863Central AngleAn ange whose vertex is the center of the circle
698868864Circumference FormulaC =∏d
698868865Area of CirclesA=∏r2

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